Immigrant detainees on hunger strike in Washington could be force-fed

Up to 130 hunger strikers protesting for a fourth day against US deportations and conditions at a Washington State immigration facility were being evaluated by medical officials on Monday and could be force-fed, a federal agency said.

Force-feeding "only happens when it is absolutely medically
necessary," Andrew Munoz, an ICE spokesman in Seattle, told
Reuters. "The main concern is to ensure [the hunger strikers]
remain healthy."

Some 130 immigrant detainees out of a total of about 1,300 were
refusing food at the privately run Northwest Detention Center,
the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said in a
statement. It added that some of the detainees, however, could be
consuming food bought from the on-site commissary.

The protest comes at a time of heightened national debate on
immigration reform, as critics point to the nearly 2 million
deportations that have occurred under President Barack Obama. At
the same time, they accuse House Republicans of blocking
immigration reform.

Tensions came to a head last year in California, where prisoners
participated in hunger strikes over a two-month period in an
effort to draw attention to the policy of holding some inmates in
isolation for years. The protests came to an end only after state
legislators agreed to hold hearings on conditions at the
facility.

Prisoners at the Washington detention facility are fighting for
the end of deportations, better food rations, a raise in the
$1-per-day wage for prison work, and better treatment by prison
guards, Sandy Restrepo, an attorney who represents several of the
strikers, told Reuters.

The prisoners at the Tacoma center, which is situated about 30
miles south of Seattle, added that they want their bond amounts
lowered, Restrepo said.

"They want a negotiation with ICE not just with false oral
promises but concrete policy changes," Restrepo said.

The operator of the facility, the GEO Group, did not respond to
repeated requests for comment, Reuters reported.

Supporters of the activists said their current numbers were
“significantly higher” than those reported by ICE, but
declined to provide an exact figure, saying that ICE has isolated
strike leaders from the regular prison population.

ICE protocol for detainees on hunger strike for at least 72 hours
calls for medical observation, as well as providing them with
three meals a day. The protesters participating in the hunger
strike reached 72 hours on Monday.

If an inmate persists in rejecting food and his life is believed
by the medical authorities to be at risk, ICE will seek a court
order to induce force feeding.